Lil Kim
Size 4. Full bodied marabou bugger with some red and gold flash. One of the best moving single hook flies that we sell.
Fulfillment takes 1-2 days with shipping time of 3-4 days.
FAQs
What does the Lil Kim imitate?
The Lil Kim is a mid-weight streamer that imitates a flashy baitfish, chub, shiner, or wounded minnow. It blends marabou movement, flash, and a strong wet profile, so it looks alive without needing a circus-level retrieve. Several shops describe it as a confidence streamer for “chucking meat,” with marabou for lifelike motion and chenille/flash to keep the profile visible underwater.
When should I fish the Lil Kim?
Fish the Lil Kim when trout are willing to chase: early spring, early fall, stained water, higher flows, cloudy weather, or low-light windows. It is especially useful anywhere baitfish like chubs and shiners are part of the food base. Bigger trout often shift toward larger, richer meals like minnows and other forage, so a streamer like this belongs in the box when you are hunting for the fish that didn’t get big by sipping politely.
How do I fish the Lil Kim?
Cast it near banks, seams, buckets, drop-offs, or structure, then strip it, swing it, or dead-drift it depending on the water. RIO notes it can be cast and stripped or swung with a trout spey setup, and other tying notes describe it as a streamer for trout, smallmouth, bass, and crappie. Give it pauses between strips so it flashes, breathes, and looks like a baitfish having a very bad afternoon.
What colors of Lil Kim should I carry?
Copper, gold, and silver are the core colors. Copper keeps things more natural, silver is a smart choice in greener water, and gold is often used around runoff or dirtier conditions. That gives you a simple little color system instead of standing in the river holding three streamers like you are trying to solve a tax form.
Why does the Lil Kim work so well?
The Lil Kim works because it combines movement, flash, and vulnerability—three big streamer triggers. The marabou breathes in the water, the flash helps it show up, and the baitfish profile gives predatory trout something worth moving for. The reference material notes that wounded baitfish imitations often work best when they flutter, struggle, sink, or look vulnerable rather than swimming in one constant straight line.